Did this while investigating #3299 which I could not reproduce.
ImGui's had a recent version that allows for dynamically scaling the
font, pretty cool, slightly improves our styling menu.
Closes#3299
This PR does the following:
- Designs a mechanism by which arm64 instructions can be encoded and
emitted
- Dispatch our higher-level instruction emitting calls to either x86 or
arm64 instructions depending on what the compiler is set to (defaults to
x86)
- Bare minimum scaffolding to get the arm64 instructions successfully
executing atleast on apple silicon
- Implement enough instructions to get the codetester test suite passing
on arm
This PR updates to SDL3, and with it, adds a handful of new features.
Everything seems to work but I'm going to look over the code once last
time before merging, some of the API changes are hard to spot.
Fixes#2773
### Pressure sensitivity support for DS3 Controllers
SDL3 adds pressure sensitivity support for DS3 controllers on windows. I
have not tested on linux. The option is disabled by default.
On windows you will need https://docs.nefarius.at/projects/DsHidMini/
and to be using SXS mode.
### DualSense and Xbox One Trigger Effects
If enabled, Jak 2 will have certain trigger effects. They are:
- xbox1:
- small vibrate when collecting dark eco
- big vibrate when changing to dark jak
- vibrate when shooting gun, proportional to gun type
- ps5:
- resistance when changing to dark jak
- different gun shooting effects
- red (resistance)
- yellow (weapon trigger)
- blue (vibrates)
- purple (less resistance)
> **Gun Shooting effects are only enabled if the new "Swap R1 and R2"
option is enabled**
There are more effects that could be used in `dualsense_effects.cpp`,
but I only exposed the ones I needed to OpenGOAL. If a modder wants to
use some of the others and wires them up end-to-end, please consider
contributing that upstream.
### New ImGUI Menu
Added new imgui options for selecting the active controller, for those
people that struggle to select the initial controller.

### Testing
The highlights of what I tested successfully:
- display
- [x] all mode switch permutations
- [x] launch with all modes saved
- [x] switch monitors / unplug monitor that was active, how does it
handle it
- [x] load with alternate monitor saved and all modes
- [x] allowing hidpi doesnt break macos
- controls
- [x] keyboard and mouse still work
- [x] pressure sensitivity on linux
By adding the `draco` library as a dependency, `tinygltf` can support
GLB files compressed with the Draco compression algorithm which allows
for drastically reduced file sizes for custom levels (TFL's Crescent Top
GLB for example went from 135 MB to 37 MB).
This updates `fmt` to the latest version and moves to just being a copy
of their repo to make updating easier (no editing their cmake / figuring
out which files to minimally include).
The motivation for this is now that we switched to C++ 20, there were a
ton of deprecated function usages that is going away in future compiler
versions. This gets rid of all those warnings.
Updates Zydis to it's latest commit, this should fix building the
project on intel macs with a more recent version of macOS. This likely
needs some sanity checks that the debugger stuff still works as
expected.
I havn't tested it yet, but I can almost guarantee that atleast `goalc`
will not work in the slightest!
But the project is atleast fully compiling. My hope is to start
translating some AVX to NEON next / get `goalc` working...eventually.
Disables the fog hack for Jak 2, where it's not useful and kind of
breaks in most levels which rely on dark vertices that aren't underwater
(e.g. city windows).
This solves two main problems:
- the looming threat of running out of memory since every thread would
consume duplicate (and probably not needed) resources
- though I will point out, jak 2's offline tests seem to hardly use any
memory even with 400+ files, duplicated across many threads. Where as
jak 1 does indeed use tons more memory. So I think there is something
going on besides just the source files
- condense the output so it's much easier to see what is happening / how
close the test is to completing.
- one annoying thing about the multiple thread change was errors were
typically buried far in the middle of the output, this fixes that
- refactors the offline test code in general to be a lot more modular
The pretty printing is not enabled by default, run with `-p` or
`--pretty-print` if you want to use it
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13153231/205513212-a65c20d4-ce36-44f6-826a-cd475505dbf9.mp4
* fix utf-8 handling around env-vars
* fix file opening errors related to unicode
* add uncaught exception handler in `gk` to ensure something is logged
* gracefully fail if window icon cant be loaded and work with unicode
* linux fix and add changes to vendor file
* deps: add `xxhash` library
* extractor: hash ISO files as they are extracted
* extractor: report on game data validation errors
* lint: formatting
* extractor: automatically pick the right decompiler config
* decomp: `eye` close just need a pile of casts for the rendering code
* stash
* decomp: `eye` mostly cleaned up, xmm reg issue with `pextlb`
* waitin
* update ref tests and gsrc
* update reference tests
* ci: switch to codacy for coverage
* docs: update badges
* decomp: allow overriding config flags via CLI
* cleanup: top level file cleanup
* docs: big README overhaul
Attempt to close#1128 and #1086
* decomp: attempt to detect if `iso_data` is missing or wrongly extracted
* game: switch to `fpng` for screenshots, allow for compression
closes#1035
* game: switch vsync control to a checkbox
* lint: format cpp files
* lint: format json files
* docs/scripts: organize taskfile